Jane Barbe
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jane Barbe (July 29, 1928 —July 18, 2003 (aged 74)) was an American voice actress known as the “Time Lady”[1] for the recordings she made for the Bell System and other phone companies.
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[edit] Life and career
Barbe, a Florida native who grew up in Atlanta, Georgia, studied drama at the University of Georgia. After graduating, she worked as a copywriter, though due to her poor spelling, she opted to read her first commercial out loud to her boss instead of submitting it in writing. He was so satisfied with her performance he asked her to record the commercial herself.
In 1963, she began recording messages for the Audichron Company (now known as ETC) announcing time, temperature and weather, as well recordings for early voice mail systems. In the ’70s and ’80s, she recorded the intercept messages used when a number is disconnected.
Through the years, her voice became well-known through the phone companies’ use of her recordings, as well as her messages recorded for voice mail clients. The time announcements she recorded for NBS (now NIST) are used on radio station WWVH.
Recordings with her voice are also used outside the United States, in Hong Kong, Saudi Arabia, and other countries. Although her native dialect was Southern, while studying drama she learned to adopt the “General American” speech she would use for most of her work. When asked to record time and temperature messages for the Australian phone company, she perfected an Australian accent by listening to recordings of Australian speakers.
[edit] Other work
Barbe was also a former professional singer, meeting her husband while touring with the Buddy Morrow Orchestra, and gained a bit of notoriety in later years appearing in commercials and on television shows based on her recognition as the “Time Lady.” As a result of her extensive work, she founded the Atlanta branch of the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists.
She also did voice-over work on TV and films including the voice of Southern author Margaret Mitchell in the documentary The Making of a Legend: Gone With the Wind in 1988.
Barbe died July 18, 2003, in Roswell, Georgia, at age 74 of complications from cancer. She is survived by her husband, John Barbe, her daughter, Susan Stubin of Passaic, New Jersey, her son David Barbe, of Athens, Georgia, and seven grandchildren.
[edit] References
- ^ Koppel, Ted. “Nightline.” Voice Mail Jail. ABC News, 1996. News Program. American Broadcasting Company. 18 Sep 1996.
[edit] External links
- Information from Electronic Tele-Communications, Inc.
- The Jane Barbe Collection from Telephone World
- Jane Barbe sample recordings
- Jane Barbe at the Internet Movie Database
- Video of telephone voices Pat Fleet and Jane Barbe from YouTube.
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NAME | Barbe, Jane |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | American singer |
DATE OF BIRTH | July 29, 1928 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Atlanta, Georgia |
DATE OF DEATH | July 18, 2003 |
PLACE OF DEATH | Roswell, Georgia |
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